If we'd come up with a struct to interpret the time, it's written
in stone and there's nothing we can do about it. Even if we break
up the struct into function arguments. However, we can use typed
parameters and have the API extensible. For example, I'm
implementing seconds granularity only for now. If later somebody
feels like he/she wants to use even finer granularity, we can do
that by inventing a new typed param. Same goes for timezone, etc.
Michal Privoznik (4):
Introduce virDomain{Get,Set}Time APIs
remote: Implement remote{Get,Set}Time
virsh: Expose virDomain{Get,Set}Time
qemu: Implement virDomain{Get,Set}Time
daemon/remote.c | 50 +++++++++++++++
include/libvirt/libvirt.h.in | 24 ++++++++
src/access/viraccessperm.c | 2 +-
src/access/viraccessperm.h | 7 ++-
src/driver.h | 14 +++++
src/libvirt.c | 96 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
src/libvirt_public.syms | 6 ++
src/qemu/qemu_agent.c | 95 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
src/qemu/qemu_agent.h | 6 ++
src/qemu/qemu_driver.c | 139 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
src/remote/remote_driver.c | 47 ++++++++++++++
src/remote/remote_protocol.x | 32 +++++++++-
src/remote_protocol-structs | 20 ++++++
tools/virsh-domain-monitor.c | 143 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
tools/virsh.pod | 16 +++++
15 files changed, 694 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)
--
1.9.0